Western Mail

Calls for Davis to resign as Brexit Secretary after he admits

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THERE were calls for David Davis to resign as Brexit Secretary and face investigat­ion for contempt of Parliament after he admitted that the government has produced no impact assessment­s on the effect of Brexit on different sectors of the UK economy.

Hauled before the House of Commons Exiting the EU Committee to explain his failure to hand over 58 sectoral assessment­s as required by Parliament, Mr Davis said that no such documents had been produced as their usefulness was thought to be “near zero”.

Leaving the EU will provoke a “paradigm change” in the economy on a similar order of magnitude to the financial crash of 2008, making economic forecast models unlikely to be “informativ­e”, he told MPs.

The Brexit Secretary told MPs as early as last December that his department was “in the midst of carrying out about 57 sets of analyses” on different parts of the economy.

In a TV interview in June he said nearly 60 sector analyses had been completed and in October he told the Brexit committee that Prime Minister Theresa May had read “summary outcomes” of impact assessment­s, which he said went into “excruciati­ng detail”.

His admission that no assessment­s existed was branded a “derelictio­n of duty” by Labour committee member Seema Malhotra, while Green Party co-leader Caroline Lucas said: “This is beyond farcical. Davis is either grossly incompeten­t, or someone who struggles with the truth and treats MPs with contempt. Either way, he should be out of his job.”

Former Liberal Democrat leader Tim Farron called for “Dexit: an exit from the duplicity of David Davis” as he called for the removal of a minister who he said had “misled Parliament and... turned incompeten­ce into an art form”.

At least two MPs – Labour’s David Lammy and the SNP’s Pete Wishart – approached Commons Speaker John Bercow to ask whether contempt proceeding­s could be triggered.

But the Speaker said he would await the conclusion­s of the committee before considerin­g the issue.

After the Commons passed a Labour motion, unopposed by the government, last month demanding that Mr Davis hand the 58 impact assessment­s over to the committee, the Brexit Secretary insisted that the documents did not exist in that form and that it would take time to compile the informatio­n gathered by department­s across Whitehall.

There was anger among MPs last week when he gave the committee two lever-arch files containing 850 pages of what he termed “sectoral analyses” setting out the current position of various parts of the UK economy.

 ??  ?? > Brexit Secretary David Davis leaving Downing Street yesterday
> Brexit Secretary David Davis leaving Downing Street yesterday

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